Effect of treadmill exercise on serum corticosterone, serum and hippocampal BDNF, hippocampal apoptosis and anxiety behavior in an ovariectomized rat model of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)

被引:17
作者
Yakhkeshi, Reza [1 ]
Roshani, Fatemeh [1 ]
Akhoundzadeh, Kobra [2 ]
Shafia, Sakineh [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Mazandaran Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Student Res Comm, Sari, Iran
[2] Qom Univ Med Sci, Fac Nursing & Midwifery, Physiol, Qom, Iran
[3] Mazandaran Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Dept Physiol, Mol & Cell Biol Res Ctr,Physiol, Sari, Iran
[4] Mazandaran Univ Med Sci, Fac Med, Immunogenet Res Ctr, Sari, Iran
关键词
PTSD; Single prolonged stress; Exercise; Ovarian hormones; Ovariectomy; ESTROGEN-RECEPTOR-ALPHA; FACTOR MESSENGER-RNA; NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR; VOLUNTARY EXERCISE; DEPRESSION-LIKE; PLUS-MAZE; BRAIN; EXPRESSION; PROTEIN; FEAR;
D O I
10.1016/j.physbeh.2021.113629
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
There is a sex difference in vulnerability to PTSD and in response to therapeutic interventions. Since relation between gonadal hormones and PTSD has been revealed, this study aimed to understand the severity of PTSDinduced impairments after ovarian hormone deficiency and the influence of exercise on PTSD accompanied by ovarian hormone deficiency. Female adult Wistar rats were subjected to ovariectomy, PTSD, or combination ovariectomy plus PTSD. Twenty days after ovariectomy, PTSD was induced by single prolonged stress (SPS) model. The exercise started 14 days after SPS and continued for 4 weeks. Thirty minutes moderate treadmill exercise was planned for 5 days per week. On day 65, after assessing rats using the elevated plus-maze (EPM) test, corticosterone, BDNF, and apoptotic markers were tested. p < 0.05 was considered as significant level. The results showed that ovariectomy worsened the effect of SPS on hippocampal BDNF and led to greater increase in serum corticosterone and hippocampal caspase 3 and BAX in SPS rats. Also, ovariectomy exacerbated anxiety like behavior in SPS rats. Exercise improved the alterations of hippocampal BDNF, corticosterone, caspase 3, and BAX in SPS ovariectomized rats. However, exercise had no statistically significant effect on anxiety-like behavior in this group. According to the results, exercise is effective to attenuate SPS-induced impairments in molecular and cellular responses even when the condition becomes more complicated due to ovarian hormone deficiency. However, exercise alone cannot help to improve behavior impairments in PTSD combined with an ovarian hormone deficiency. Therefore, exercise could likely be considered as a complementary intervention to strengthen other treatments.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 76 条
  • [1] The Detrimental Effect of Aging on Leptomeningeal Collaterals in Ischemic Stroke
    Arsava, Ethem Murat
    Vural, Atay
    Akpinar, Erhan
    Gocmen, Rahsan
    Akcalar, Seray
    Oguz, Kader K.
    Topcuoglu, Mehmet Akif
    [J]. JOURNAL OF STROKE & CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2014, 23 (03) : 421 - 426
  • [2] Activation of BDNF signaling prevents the return of fear in female mice
    Baker-Andresen, Danay
    Flavell, Charlotte R.
    Li, Xiang
    Bredy, Timothy W.
    [J]. LEARNING & MEMORY, 2013, 20 (05) : 237 - 240
  • [3] World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry (WFSBP) Guidelines for the Pharmacological Treatment of Anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders - First Revision
    Bandelow, Borwin
    Zohar, Joseph
    Hollander, Eric
    Kasper, Siegfried
    Moeller, Hans-Juergen
    Allgulander, Christer
    Ayuso-Gutierrez, Jose
    Baldwin, David
    Bunevicius, Robertas
    Cassano, Giovanni
    Fineberg, Naomi
    Gabriels, Loes
    Hindmarch, Ian
    Kaiya, Hisanobu
    Klein, Donald F.
    Lader, Malcolm
    Lecrubier, Yves
    Lepine, Jean-Pierre
    Liebowitz, Michael R.
    Lopez-Ibor, Juan Jose
    Marazziti, Donatella
    Miguel, Euripedes C.
    Oh, Kang Seob
    Preter, Maurice
    Rupprecht, Rainer
    Sato, Mitsumoto
    Starcevic, Vladan
    Stein, Dan J.
    van Ameringen, Michael
    Vega, Johann
    [J]. WORLD JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2008, 9 (04) : 248 - 312
  • [4] Estrogen and exercise interact to regulate brain-derived neurotrophic factor mRNA and protein expression in the hippocampus
    Berchtold, NC
    Kesslak, JP
    Pike, CJ
    Adlard, PA
    Cotman, CW
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2001, 14 (12) : 1992 - 2002
  • [5] The exercise-glucocorticoid paradox: How exercise is beneficial to cognition, mood, and the brain while increasing glucocorticoid levels
    Chen, Chong
    Nakagawa, Shin
    An, Yan
    Ito, Koki
    Kitaichi, Yuji
    Kusumi, Ichiro
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, 2017, 44 : 83 - 102
  • [6] Treadmill exercise suppressed stress-induced dendritic spine elimination in mouse barrel cortex and improved working memory via BDNF/TrkB pathway
    Chen, K.
    Zhang, L.
    Tan, M.
    Lai, C. S. W.
    Li, A.
    Ren, C.
    So, K-F
    [J]. TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY, 2017, 7 : e1069 - e1069
  • [7] Single-prolonged stress induces apoptosis in the amygdala in a rat model of post-traumatic stress disorder
    Ding, Jinlan
    Han, Fang
    Shi, Yuxiu
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRIC RESEARCH, 2010, 44 (01) : 48 - 55
  • [8] High-Fat Feeding Improves Anxiety-Type Behavior Induced by Ovariectomy in Rats
    Dornellas, Ana P. S.
    Boldarine, Valter T.
    Pedroso, Amanda P.
    Carvalho, Lorenza O. T.
    de andrade, Iracema S.
    Vulcani-Freitas, Tania M.
    dos Santos, Carla C. C.
    da Penha Oller do Nascimento, Claudia M.
    Oyama, Lila M.
    Ribeiro, Eliane B.
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2018, 12
  • [9] Long-term voluntary exercise and the mouse hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis: Impact of concurrent treatment with the antidepressant drug tianeptine
    Droste, S. K.
    Schweizer, M. C.
    Ulbricht, S.
    Reul, J. M. H. M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROENDOCRINOLOGY, 2006, 18 (12) : 915 - 925
  • [10] The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis in PTSD: Pathophysiology and treatment interventions
    Dunlop, Boadie W.
    Wong, Andrea
    [J]. PROGRESS IN NEURO-PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY & BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2019, 89 : 361 - 379